Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
High-grade pancreatic injury is rare, and the reported complication and mortality are high.
The optimal management strategy according to high-grade injuries remains controversial.
The present study compares surgical drainage with percutaneous drainage in the management of High-grade pancreatic trauma.
Full description
High-grade pancreatic trauma (HGPT), while uncommon, presents challenging diagnostic and therapeutic dilemmas to trauma surgeons. Multiple management strategies to HGPT have been reported, which was associated with a high level of morbidity and mortality rate. Besides, few prospective studies have investigated the optimal management strategy of patients with HGPT.
We aimed to compare surgical drainage with percutaneous drainage in the management of HGPT. To do so, the strategy is to integrate precise prospective clinical records extensive clinical treatment data in a large cohort of patients. All the clinical departments, participating in the study, include patients, with tight collaboration between Trauma, Intensive Care and Surgery departments. Demographics and clinical parameters are collected in a database.
Once after the diagnosis is confirmed, the inclusion of patients is performed, before scheduled hospital management, and after eligibility criteria checking, and consent form signature. During clinical management, several samples are collected: blood samples and surgical specimens. As a usual practice, post-operative treatment will be prescribed at the investigator's discretion, with the help of an acre-established algorithm. Several samples are also collected during this exam(blood and biological tissue sample).
At the same time as these managements, clinical data regarding medical history, pre-hospital treatment history, surgical history, treatment history, post-operative treatment if prescribed, treatment history between surgery and image logical diagnosis are recorded. Clinical data are also collected 12months after discharge during a scheduled visit organized as usual practice, for long-term study.
Several studies will be performed along with the cohort setting-up:
All the biologic samples are stored on sites at -80°C, or at room temperature depending on the samples: Samples collected in tubes, are sent immediately, at room temperature, to the central pathology department in Jinling Hospital, Nanjing, China. All the other samples, stored at -80°C, are sent to the research institute of General Surgery, Medical School of Nanjing University, China.
Samples analyses are performed by dedicated research centers: DNA, and RNA extraction for transcriptome analysis, histological analyzes, etc:
Histological analyzes: Analysis of the structure of the excised pancreas or intestinal tissue.
Molecular Biology: Whole-genome expression analyses are performed using microarray and followed by Gene Ontology and clustering analyses.
Microbiota: Bacterial composition of the ileal mucosa-associated microbiota is analyzed at the time of surgery using 16S (MiSeq, Illumina) sequencing. The obtained sequences are analyzed using the Qiime pipeline to assess composition, alpha and beta diversity.
Immunology: Phenotype of immune cells: Immune cells are extracted from blood and fresh mucosal tissues. The phenotype of these cells is analyzed by cytometry.
Analysis of neutrophil extracellular traps:
The concentrations of cell-free DNA, cell-free nucleosomes, neutrophil elastase(NE) and myeloperoxidase (MPO) were measured in sera and plasma byHuman Cell Death Detection ELISA or sandwich ELISA.
Pancreatic tissue was removed rapidly and divided into different parts for later analyses. One was used for confocal microscopy and one third was snap-frozen in liquid nitrogen for biochemical quantification of pancreatic myeloperoxidase(MPO), histone 3, and histone 4 levels, etc. One was fixed in formalin for histologic analysis.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
80 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Kai Wang, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal